Summary This international multidisciplinary consensus statement was developed to provide balanced guidance on the safe peri‐operative use of opioids in adults. An international panel of healthcare professionals evaluated the literature relating to postoperative opioid‐related harm, including persistent postoperative opioid use; opioid‐induced ventilatory impairment; non‐medical opioid use; opioid diversion and dependence; and driving under the influence of prescription opioids. Recommended strategies to reduce harm include pre‐operative assessment of the risk of persistent postoperative opioid use; use of an assessment of patient function rather than unidimensional pain scores alone to guide adequacy of analgesia; avoidance of long‐acting (modified‐release and transdermal patches) opioid formulations and combination analgesics; limiting the number of tablets prescribed at discharge; providing deprescribing advice; avoidance of automatic prescription refills; safe disposal of unused medicines; reducing the risk of opioid diversion; and better education of healthcare professionals, patients and carers. This consensus statement provides a framework for better prescribing practices that could help reduce the risk of postoperative opioid‐related harm in adults.
The dose of opioid prescribed for postoperative pain relief has traditionally been based on the weight of the patient. Although a reduction in dose is often suggested for elderly patients over 70 years of age, age-related alterations to dose are generally not considered for younger patients. The records of 1010 patients, under 70 years old, prescribed morphine via patient-controlled analgesia (PCA) after major operations were examined to see what factors might best predict the amount of morphine used in the first 24 h after surgery. Factors included were age, sex, weight, operative site, verbal numeric pain score (at rest and on movement) and a nausea/vomiting score. In a subgroup of 78 of these patients, the effects of intraoperative and recovery room doses of opioid ('clinical' loading dose) were analysed. Although the interpatient variability in PCA morphine doses was large (differences of up to 10-fold in each age group), the best predictor of PCA morphine requirement in the first 24 h after surgery (the amount required in the 24 h after the initial loading dose) was the age of the patient. An estimate of these requirements for patients over the age of 20 years can be obtained from the formula: average first 24 h morphine requirement (mg) = 100 - age. PCA allows patients the flexibility to titrate their own opioid dose; if conventional analgesic regimens are to become more effective, they too need to allow for the wide interpatient variation in dose requirements. Although previous studies have noted a correlation between patient age and the amount of opioid needed, this study quantifies this correlation and provides guidelines for opioid dosing. Prescriptions for conventional analgesic regimens should include a dose range centred on values obtained from the above formula to allow for the large interpatient variation in each age group. While initial morphine dose should be guided by patient age and not weight, subsequent doses must still be titrated according to effect.
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